It’s been nearly two weeks since Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke announced that Florida would be exempt from the Trump administration’s new coastal oil-drilling plan, touching off a controversy that led many governors — from both parties and both coasts — to demand equal treatment.
Complicating matters, it now appears the Trump administration may not honor Zinke’s promise to Gov. Rick Scott (R). The New York Times reported:
In a surprise statement undercutting Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke’s announcement last week that he was exempting Florida from President Trump’s offshore drilling plan, a senior Interior Department official said Friday that Florida’s coastal waters had not been excluded after all. […]
On Friday, the head of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, the Interior Department agency that manages offshore leasing, said Mr. Zinke’s Florida decision was not final…. Instead, the bureau was pushing ahead with the required review of resources off the nation’s shores, including Florida’s, he said. A decision on whether to offer leases off Florida as part of the administration’s offshore program would come after that analysis.
Walter Cruickshank, the bureau’s acting director, told a House Committee on Natural Resources panel on Friday that Zinke’s statement was “not a formal action.” Cruickshank added that he didn’t know anyone at the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management whom Zinke had consulted before announcing special treatment for Florida.
In other words, the controversial cabinet secretary had effectively shared his opinion, but he didn’t announce an official policy — though it looked at the time as if Zinke had done exactly that.









